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FOODFIC: Discovering Vintage New Orleans - Bonnye Stuart

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Because I lived in NOLA for so many years, I can never pass up a chance to read what others recommend that visitors see and do in The Big Easy. Must-sees, must-dos, must- eats ; I have to know each compiler’s picks. Of course, I’m most interested in which restaurants and bars top each list. #FoodFact. Or #FoodOpinion? Hmm. I’ll leave that here for digestion. ;) Anyway, this guide points out all the old favorites, which makes sense as Stuart has chosen to focus on the “vintage” spots. Not surprisingly, I found I’d been to most (if not all) of the eateries and drinkeries and visitories she describes. I checked off everything from lunch at Commander’s to climbing Monkey Hill to drinks at the Old Absinthe House. I’ve not, however, actually had absinthe. Yes, the popular depictions of “the green fairy” as “psychoactive” and “hallucinogenic” seem reason enough not to imbibe,   but the bigger issue was its illegality. Since I hadn’t been actively following absinthe’s “status,” it came as a

FOODFIC: Please Welcome Brooklyn James, Author of Jolie Blonde

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Brianna Bentley Castille (aka Jolie Blonde ) fancies lobster and lots of it, the more clarified grass-fed butter in which to dip the succulent sea fare all the better. As a hard-pressed prosecutor for Orleans Parish District Attorney’s Office, the fork and veggies will have to wait. Just keep the protein-packed, vitamins/minerals-loaded lobster and butter coming, she’ll lap up the energizing essentials with one hand while the other works through cases and codes. Oh, and if you have a Sazerac, a Big Easy favorite, she favors it, too. Though keep the lemon peel for someone who has time for ‘garnish.’ If you’re interning at the firm, Café Du Monde is not a luxury but a morning necessity—two beignets and one café au lait heavy on the chicory, please. Jolie Blonde , a nickname given her by her childhood sweetheart’s father, would invite you over for a bayou feast of gator, po’ boys, etouffee and sweet sun tea. Relaxed and at home she is, only when in the company of that childhood sweetheart

FOODFIC: Please Welcome Karen Ann Hopkins, Author of EMBERS

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There are descendants of angels walking among us. Ember is one of them. Embers is an epic paranormal adventure/romance about a girl who discovers that she’s immune to fire and any other injury when she’s in a horrific car crash that kills her parents. Following a violent episode with her aunt’s boyfriend, Ember flees Ohio to live with an old relative in the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee. Ember’s exuberance at escaping a bad home life soon turns to trepidation when she learns that she’s a Watcher, a descendant of angels. While Ember is instructed about her heritage and the powers that go along with it, she strikes up friendships with two teenagers who live inside of a frightening walled compound in the forest. Inexplicably drawn to one of the young men in particular, an impossible romance develops. But it’s cut short when Ember discovers that her new friends are fighting on the opposite side of a war that’s been raging between two factions of Watchers for thousands of years. When the co

FOODFIC: Please Welcome Connie Hambley, Author of The Charity

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Food and the Art of Cooking Up Characters All Irish are born with a love of a cuppa. Right? The deep rosy tones of Irish Breakfast tea are supposed to give respite in a hectic day and provide a moment of clarity where all ills can be cured and all problems solved. Yeah, right. Guess again. The “Irish Love Tea” is a broadly held stereotype many readers hold. Turning an assumption upside down allows me to surprise a reader and have some fun in the process. My recently completed trilogy’s main character is Jessica Wyeth, a world-class equestrian with Irish roots. She was raised in the States, so her attitudes are distinctly American. She is strong, assertive, and independent. Oh, and she craves a great cup of coffee. I’ll confess to playing on stereotypes, too with that old “Irish Love Pubs” assumption that flirts with cliché. Instead of drunken sots weeping into their whiskeys, I placed characters having crucial political conversations in back rooms or families enjoying a night of lively

7-Year Blogiversary!

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Year 7 was a lucky one for me, as so many terrific authors stopped by to share their food for thought: Jeffrey Beesler – Speed Demons Eldritch Black – The Book of Kindly Deaths Jenn Brink – Silver Bells Carole Brown – The Redemption of Caralynne Hayman Peggy Chambers – The Apocalypse Sucks Jeff Chapman – The Black Blade Debra Chapoton – Sheltered Caroline Clemmons – The Texan's Irish Bride April Michelle Davis – A Princess in Disguise Steve DeWinter – Forgotten Girl Brittany Hawes – Wicked Cathryn Hein – The Country Girl David Hogan – The Last Island Holly Jacobs – Steamed Jessica Knauss – Awash in Talent Deborah Lawrenson – The Lantern John Mefford – IN Doubt Assaph Mehr – Murder in Absentia A.G. Moye – Cronicles of the Marauder Luke Murphy – Wild Card Patricia Obermeier Neuman & Rosalind Burgess – Lethal Property D.H. Nevins – Wormwood Cory Putman Oakes – Witchtown Laurence O'Bryan – The Cairo Puzzle Jean Knight Pace & Jacob Kennedy – Grey Lore Stephen Penner – A Lack